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Biographical Memoirs: Volume 44 (1974)

Chapter: 8. Theodore William Richards

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Suggested Citation:"8. Theodore William Richards." National Academy of Sciences. 1974. Biographical Memoirs: Volume 44. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/567.
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WINTHROP JOHN VANLEUVEN OSTERHOUT 243 1935 With S. E. Hill. Positive variations in Nitella. l.G.P., 18:369-75. With S. E. Hill. Nature of the action current in Nitella. II. Special cases. [.G.P., 18:377-83. With S. E. Hill. Nature of the action current in Nitella. Some ad- ditional features. l.G.P., 18:499-514. With S. E. Hill. Restoration of the potassium effect by means of action currents. i.G.P., 18:681-86. Mechanical restoration of irritability and of the potassium effect. ~.G.P., 18: 687-94. With A. G. Jacques. The kinetics of penetration. XI. Entrance of potassium into ~Vitella. }.G.P., 18: 967-85. Chemical restoration in Nitella. I. Ammonia and some of its com- pounds. J.G.P., 18: 987-95. With S. E. Kamerling. The accumulation of electrolytes. VIII. The accumulation of KC1 in models. ~.G.P., 19:167-78. With S. E. Hill. Pacemakers in Nitella. I. Temporary local dif- ferences in rhythm. l.G.P., 19: 307-9. How do electrolytes enter the cell? Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci., 21: 125-32. How do electrolytes penetrate the cell? Collecting Net, 10:1-8. With S. E. Hill. The role of ions in Valonia and Nitella. Biol. Bull., 69:329. \Vith S. E. Hill _ Some experimental modifications of the protoplasmic surface. Proc. Soc. Exp. Biol. Med., 32:715-16. With S. E. Hill. Some aspects of anesthesia and irritability. Sci- ence, 81:418-19. Mechanism of salt absorption by plant cells. Nature, 136: 1034-35. 1936 Chemical restoration in Nitella. II. Restorative action of blood. |.G.P., 19:423-25. Electrical phenomena in large plant cells. Physiological Reviews, 16:216-37. The absorption of electrolytes in large plant cells. Bot. Rev., 2:283-315. U ber e~n~ge chemische und elektrische Eigenschaften von proto- plasmaoberflachen. Kolloid-Zeitschrift, 77:373-85. With S. E. Hill. Some ways to control bioelectrical behavior. Cold Spring Harbor Symp. Quant. Biol., 4: 43-52.

244 BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS Changes of apparent ionic mobilities in protoplasm. I. Effects of guaiacol on Valonia. J.G.P., 20: 13~3. 1937 Changes of apparent ionic mobilities in protoplasm. II. The action of guaiacol as affected by pH. {.G.P., 20:685-93. Electrochemical methods in the study of plant cells. Transactions of the Electrochemical Society, 71:93-99. The protoplasmic surface in certain plant cells. Transactions of the Faraday Society, 33:997-1002. 1938 With S. E. Hill. Calculations of bioelectric potentials. II. The concentration potential of KC1 in Nitella. J.G.P., 21:541-56. Effects of potassium on the potential of Halicystis. i.G.P., 21:631- 34. With A. G. Jacques. The accumulation of electrolytes. X. Accumu- lation of iodine by Halicystis and Valonia. i.G.P., 21 :687-93. Changes of apparent ionic mobilities in protoplasm. III. Some ef- fects of guaiacol on Halicystis. J.G.P., 21:707-20. With A. G. Jacques. The accumulation of electrolytes. XI. Ac- cumulation of nitrate by Valonia and Halicystis. J.G.P., 21:767- 73. With S. E. Hill. Nature of the action current in Nitella. IV. Pro- duction of quick action currents by exposure to NaCl. l.G.P., 22:91-106. With S. E. Hill. Delayed potassium effect in Nitella. J.~.P., 22: 107-13. With S. E. Hill. Pacemakers in Nitella. II. Arrhythmia and block. J.G.P., 22:115-30. With S. E. Hill. Calculations of bioelectric potentials. IV. Some effects of calcium on potentials in Nitella. ~.G.P., 22:139-46. With I. W. Murray. The movement of water from concentrated to dilute solutions through liquid membranes. Science, 87:430. (A) With l. W. Murray. Movement of water against a gradient in models. Proc. Soc. Exp. Biol. Med., 38:468-70. Potentials in Halicystis as affected by non-electrolytes. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci., 24:75-76. With S. E. Hill. Calculations of bioelectric potentials. III. Varia-

WINTHROP JOHN VANLEUVEN OSTERHOUT 245 tion in partition coefficients and ion mobilities. Sci., 24:312-15. With S. E. Hill. Reversal of the potassium effect in Nitella. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci., 24:427-29. 1939 Proc. Nat. Acad. Changes of apparent ionic mobilities in protoplasm. IV. Influence of guaiacol on the effects of sodium and potassium in Nitella. J.G.P., 22:417-27. Calculations of bioelectric potentials. V. Potentials in Halicystis. J.G.P., 23:53-57. Calculations of bioelectric potentials. VI. Some effects of guaiacol on Nitella. i.G.P., 23: 171-76. With S. E. Hill. Chemical restoration in Nitella. III. Effects of in- organic salts. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci., 25:3-5. With I. W. Murray. Science, 90:397-98. Note on water in non-aqueous solutions. 1940 Alfred George Jacques. Science, 91: 133-34. With l. W. Murray. Behavior of water in certain heterogeneous systems. [.G.P., 23: 365-90. Some chemical aspects of the potassium effect. l.G.P., 23:429-32. Effects of hexylresorcinol on Nitella. ~.G.P., 23:569-73. With S. E. Hill. Action curves with single peaks in Nitella in re- lation to the movement of potassium. J.G.P., 23:743~8. Effects of guaiacol and hexylresorcinol in the presence of barium and calcium. ~.G.P., 23: 749-51. Chemical restoration in Nitella. IV. Effects of guanidine. {.G.P., 24:7-8. With S. E. Hill. The experimental production of double peaks in Chara action curves and their relation to the movement of potassium. J.G.P., 24: 9-13. Some models of protoplasmic surfaces. Quant. Biol., 8: ~ 1-52. 1941 Cold Spring Harbor Symp. Effects of hexylresorcinol on Valonia. J.G.P., 24: 311-13. Effects of nitrobenzene and benzene on Valonia. J.G.P., 24:699-702. Positive potentials due to aniline and the antagonistic action of ammonia. Journal of Cellular and Comparative Physiology, 18: 129-35.

246 BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS 1942 Increased irritability in Nitella due to guanidine. 1943 Diffusion potentials in models and in living cells. 307. Pacemakers in Nitella. III. Electrical alternans. J.G.P., 26:457-65. Nature of the action current in Nitella. V. Partial response and the all-or-none law. l.G.P., 27:61-68. A model of the potassium effect. l.G.P., 27:91-100. Studies of the inner and outer surfaces of large plant cells. I. Plas- molysis due to salts. t.G.P., 27: 139~2. William Albert Setchell (1864-1943~. American Philosophical So- ciety Yearbook, pp. 431-32. J.G.P., 26:65-73. J.G.P., 26:293- 1944 Studies of the inner and outer protoplasmic surfaces of large plant cells. l.G.P., 28: 17-22. Differing rates of death at inner and outer surfaces of the proto- plasm. I. Effects of formaldehyde on Nitella. ~.G.P., 28:23-36. Differing rates of death at inner and outer surfaces of the proto- plasm. II. Negative potential in Nitella caused by formaldehyde. J.G.P., 28:37-41. Differing rates of death at inner and outer surfaces of the proto- plasm. III. Effects of mercuric chloride on Nitella. J.G.P., 28:343-47. 1945 Effects of hydroxyl on negative and positive cells of Nitella. l.G.P., 29:43-56. Water relations in the cell. I. The chloroplasts of Nitella and of Spirogyra. J.G.P., 29:73-78. 1946 Some properties of protoplasmic gels. I. Tension in the chloroplast of S/?irogyra. l.G.P., 29:181-92. Nature of the action current in Nitella. VI. Simple and complex action patterns. J. G. P., 30:47-59.

WINTHROP JOHN VANLEUVEN OSTERHOUT 247 1947 Some properties of protoplasmic gels. II. Contraction of chloro- plasts in currents of water entering the cell and expansion in outgoing currents. {.G.P., 30: 229-34. The absorption of electrolytes in large plant cells. II. Bot. Rev., 13: 194-215. Some aspects of secretion. I. Secretion of water. 1948 |.G.P., 30:439-47. Abnormal protoplasmic patterns and death in slightly hypertonic solutions. J.G.P., 31 :291-300. Effects of hypertonic solutions on Nereis eggs. Biol. Bull., 95:269. (A) Solubility of the vitelline membrane of Nereis eggs. Biol. Bull., 95:269. (A) Experiments on chloroplasts and on photosynthesis. Biol. Bull., 95:270. (A) 1949 Movements of water in cells of Nitella. ~.G.P., 32:553-58. Transport of water from concentrated to dilute solutions in cells of Nitella. [.G.P., 32:559-66. Some bioelectric problems. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci., 35:548-58. Extrusion of jelly by eggs of Nereis limbata under electrical stimulus. Biol. Bull., 97:260. (A) 1950 Higher permeability for water than for ethyl alcohol in Nitella. J.G.P., 33:275-84. Effects of electrical currents on the absorption of water by eggs of Nereis km bata. l.G.P., 33: 379-88. Distant effects of toxic agents. The mechanism of accumulation. Biol. Bull., 99:308. (A) Activation of Nereis eggs by a detergent. Biol. Bull., 99:362. (A) Relative solubility of the components of the Nereis egg. Biol. Bull., 99:362. (A) J.G.P., 34:279-84. 1951 Injury in relation to cell organization. J.G.P., 34:321-23.

248 BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS Behavior of jelly in eggs of Nereis limbata. Biol. Bull., 101:226. (A) Detergent action of sperm extract in Nereis limbata. Biol. Bull., 101:226. (A) lg52 Some aspects of protoplasmic motion. J.G.P., 35:519-27. Mechanism of accumulation in living cells. ~.G.P., 35:579-94. Activation of eggs of Nereis limbata by a surface active extract of dead sperm. Biol. Bull., 103:305-6. (A) Reversible contraction of protoplasmic structures by changes in pH values. Biol. Bull., 103:306. (A) 1953 Protamin in an extract of the sperm of Nereis limbata. Biol. Bull.. 105:379-80. (A) Surface active material obtained from Nereis limbata. Biol. Bull., 1 05; 380. (A) With Theodore Shedlovsky. Surface active properties of an extract of the sperm of Ne'-eis limbata. Biol. Bull, 105:383-84. (A) 1954 Changes in resting potential due to a shift of electrolytes in the cell produced by non-electrolytes. l.G.P., 37 :423-32. Apparent violations of the all-or-none law in relation to potassium in the protoplasm. l.G.P., 37:813-24. Note on the work of Jacques Loeb. In: Ion Transport Across Mem- branes, pp. 1-2. New York, Academic Press, Inc. Reversible clotting in Sp~rogyra. Biol. Bull., 107:317. (A) 1955 Reversible shrinkage in Chaetomorpha. Biol. Bull., lO9: 366. (A) Apparent violations of the all-or-none law in relation to potassium in the protoplasm. In: Electrochemistry in Biology and 2VIedi- cine, ed. by T. Shedlovsky, pp. 213-24. New York, John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 1956 The role of water in protoplasmic permeability and in an- tagonism. J.G.P., 39:963-76.

WINTHROP JOHN VANLEUVEN OSTERHOUT 249 Effect of electric current on the contraction of the chloroplasts of Spirogyra. Biol. Bull., 111:310. (A) 1957 The use of aquatic plants in the study of some fundamental prob- lems. Annual Review of Plant Physiology, 8:1-10.

THEODORE WILLIAM RICHARDS January 31,1 868-A pril 2,1928 BY JAMES BRYANT CONANT THEODORE WILLIAM RICHARDS was a precocious son of distin- guished parents. He was born in Philadelphia on January 31, 1868, the third son and fifth child of William Trost Richards and Anna Matlack Richards, who had been married on June 30, 1856. As strict members of the Society of Friends, the Matlack family looked askance at a young man who earned his living painting pictures. Anna was "read out of meeting." The Quaker marriage ceremony took place in the house of a friend. The first months of the honeymoon were devoted to the com- position and illustration of a manuscript volume of poems for the lady who had first brought the young couple together. A mutual interest in Browning and Tennyson had started an acquaintanceship which rapidly became a romance. An old friend and fellow artist of Philadelphia reminiscing long after W. T. Richards had established his reputation as a landscape painter said, "He amazed me by getting married and resigning his position as designer fin a local firm manufacturing gas fixtures] in order to devote himself entirely to his art. I don't remember which event took place first but I thought the latter extremely unwise—and so it would have been with anyone else, but timidity had no place in his nature." Of the struggle of a largely self-taught artist to support a family in the Civil War years there is little record. By the time the third son, 251

252 BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS Theodore, was conscious of his environment, the artist's family was comfortably settled in Germantown (a suburb of Philadel- phia); the summers were spent in Newport, Rhode Island (after 1874~. Whether the father or the mother had the greater influence on young Theodore may be argued. But to anyone who ex- amines the few personal documents that are left, there can be no doubt that the future chemist's career was molded at the outset by his two extraordinary parents. In an article prepared for a Swedish journal shortly after he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1915, Theodore Richards paid tribute to his under- standing mother and father: "Although my parents had no experience with scientific in- vestigation, their tastes and education having been of a very different kind, nevertheless they entered fully into the spirit of my desire to undertake it, and were wise enough to see that a possible future lay ahead for me in the path which so pro- foundly interested me. From that time my father always ad- vised me to devote myself as much as possible to research. More- over, he supported this advice in a very practical way (realizing that research in pure science is not a money-getting employment) and offered always to help me, out of his none too plentiful means, in case of a pinch, rather than to permit me to engage in the distracting task of making money by occupations outside of my main interest. Later after my marriage in 1896, when new cares presented themselves, and when he saw there was danger of my overworking, he placed into my hands a sum of money large enough to enable me to feel that I could take a year's rest from academic work, if that should prove necessary. The relief from worry, afforded by this sum in a savings bank, made the vacation unnecessary. There is no question that this generous and thoughtful confidence was a very important factor in the success of a not very optimistic and somewhat delicate young man, then entirely without any capital except his brains; and

THEODORE WILLIAM RICHARDS 253 it would be impossible to exaggerate my feelings of gratitude." Quite apart from the wise advice and the financial assistance, William T. Richards must have influenced his third son by his example. "There was nothing of the pose of his craft about him," writes his biographer, "the cast of keen observation in his face, and the easy grace of his carriage, denoted the man of original thought and unconstrained opinion, the artist who sees a little deeper into objective life than most people, and whose instincts are, therefore, less confined to convention.... He knew he could draw matchlessly, and yet there were elements in the portrayal of a breaking wave that he never achieved to his own satisfaction. If you pressed him with commendation on the side of drawing he would shield his modesty behind his struggles with that miracle of color under the curving wave. He had studied this for years. His son tells us that 'he stood for hours in the early days of Atlantic City or Cape May, with folded arms, studying the motion of the sea,—until people thought him insane. After days of gazing he made pencil notes of the action of the water. He even stood for hours in a bathing suit among the waves, trying to analyse the motion.' " The words of the son which the father's biographer quotes demonstrate how much the patience and thoroughness of the artist bent on portraying nature had impressed the boy who so often stood by while the beginnings of a seascape were form- ing in the painter's mind. The link between the world of science and the world of art was a pride of both father and son in a capacity to take infinite pains. The chemist who was to become famous for the painstaking accuracy of his experimenta- tions may well have received his inspiration from watching his father standing hour after hour in the surf. If the influence of the father is largely a matter of conjecture, the role of Theodore's mother in his upbringing is definite and clear. She provided the formal education at home. Her ex- perience with the schools in Germantown had been unsatis-

254 BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS factory. Therefore she decided to try the experiment of teach- ing the younger children herself. "We used to have regular hours and school was not to be slighted," Theodore Richards reports in an autobiographical fragment. Continuing, the description, he notes that "drawing and music were included in this home curriculum and so, of course, were reading, writing, arithmetic and geography as well as much more history than is usually taught to young children.... My mother's devotion was tireless and beyond praise. My debt to her (as well as to my father) is inestimable." He might well so write since not only had his mother's instruc- tion prepared him for entry to the sophomore class at Haverford at the age of fourteen but her tutoring in Greek (which she learned for this purpose) a year later enabled him to enroll in the senior class at Harvard after graduation from Haverford. A typescript composed two years before Richards died is entitled "Early Memories." He ends with an account of his leaving the summer home near Newport to head for college. He was "on his own for the first time," he writes. "With me in my pocket I carried two sonnets written for me by my mother (who was in many ways a very remarkable and brilliant woman)." Then follow the two sonnets, of which the opening lines of the second amount almost to a parental injunction: Fear not to go Fleece fearless Science leads, Who holds the keys of God. What reigning light Thine eyes discern in that surrounding night Whence we have come, what law that supersedes The fiat of all oracles and creeds, Thy soul will never find that Wrong is Right; At Christmas 1880, when Richards was not quite thirteen, chemistry had entered his life. He was given a large box con- taining materials and apparatus for 200 experiments "warranted to be safe and instructive." Richards has recorded his progress

THEODORE WILLIAM RICHARDS 255 as a chemical student as follows: "Soon afterwards, when I had nearly blown off my head with this outfit, I was given Steele's Fourteen Weeks in Chemistry so that knowledge might diminish the risk; and when the somewhat limited scope of this book had been outspanned, I advanced to Eliot and Storer's Elementary Chemistry which contained a priceless fund of information.... Dr. John Marshall of the University of Pennsylvania Medical School was good enough to interest himself in the boy of thirteen who was so eager for sound chemical knowledge. He invited me to Professor Wormley's lectures at the University of Pennsylvania." Such was Richards's memory in later years of his introduction to chemistry. At Haverford he first studied the subject with a serious purpose under Lyman B. Hall and decided to become a chemist. Looking back to that period in his life he recalls that "except for his somewhat defective eyesight he might have chosen to become an astronomer." At this point Josiah Parsons Cooke, Professor of Chemistry at Harvard, whom the family had come to know during the summers at Newport, Rhode Island, enters the story. He seems to have been instrumental in Richards's decision to spend another year of study and to take a second bachelor's degree at Harvard. Two years later Richards received the Ph.D. degree for important research on the atomic weights of oxygen and hydrogen accomplished under Professor Cooke's guidance. The results were reported in a paper published in 1888 as a joint communication. In the same year Richards printed three other papers based on his inde- pendent work on the atomic weights of copper and silver, as well as one dealing with the heat produced by the reaction of silver nitrate with solutions of metallic chlorides. Four publica- tions and the young investigator was not yet twenty-one! Then followed a year abroad. Two pieces of research were conducted in the chemical laboratory of Gottingen University, one in analytical chemistry

256 BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS under Paul Jannasch and one on vapor chemistry determination under Victor Meyer. In addition some weeks were spent in Munich and in Dresden studying special chemical methods. As a supplement to what Professor Cooke could teach him, these experiences seemed to place the young American chemist in the mainstream of current investigations. They formed an in- troduction to a far more important semester spent in Leipzig (with Wilhelm Ostwald) and in Gottingen (with Walther Nernst) in 1895. These two periods spent in German laboratories could be regarded as Richards's training in the then newly developing field of physical chemistry. At that period in history there were no centers of research in physical chemistry in either the United States or England. It is not much of an exaggeration to speak of Richards as a German-trained scientist. His outlook on life, however, was in no sense Germanic. In spite of his early and wide acquaintanceship among German chemists and a half year spent in Berlin in 1907, he seems to have found little to attract him in the empire ruled by the Kaiser. In England, on the other hand, he made lifelong friends. In the summer of 1889 he met one of the outstanding chemists, Sir Henry Roscoe (who was a friend of Professor Cooke), as well as Lord Rayleigh, who was soon to become an internationally famous physicist. With the English investigators he felt very much at home. He admired them and their way of life. It is altogether fitting that the definitive account of his life is the Theodore William Richards Memorial Lecture delivered by Sir Harold Hartley before the Chemical Society of London on April 25, 1929. Richards was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1899. Of all the many honors he received, the award of the Faraday Medal of the Chemical Society of London must have pleased him as much as any. Together with his wife and three children he traveled to England in May 1911 for the occasion. Sir Harold Hartley refers to Richards's pleasure at Professor H. Pi. Dixon's allusion to him as the Faraday Lecturer who was

THEODORE WILLIAM RICHARDS 257 fulfilling Canning's prophecy: "I look to the new world to redress the balance of the old." Honorary degrees from Oxford, Cambridge, and Manchester added to the delight of that sum- mer. The Nobel Prize in chemistry awarded in November 1915 may be considered as the climax of Richards's public recog- nition. World War I, however, prevented his going to Sweden to receive the award at the time of its announcement. Later a projected trip had to be canceled because of the sudden illness of his oldest son, who was to have accompanied him to Stock- ho~m. As much as Richards loved England, and after the invasion of Belgium in 1914 despised all things German, his career as a teacher followed the pattern of Germany. Indeed, a call to the University of Gottingen in 1902 may be said to have assured his position at Harvard. President C. W. Eliot made him a full professor and agreed to the construction of new laboratory facilities if and when funds could be raised. (The Wolcott Gibbs Memorial Laboratory was built for Richards just before World War I.) Richards desired a few (but only a few? graduate students, the professorship of physical chemistry which involved giving a full course of lectures, and the privilege of continuing a half course of lectures on "Elementary Theoretical and Phys- ical Chemistry, including the Historical Development of Chem- ical Theory." This course he had initiated in the 1890s when he was still an assistant professor. These teaching tasks Richards thoroughly enjoyed because he did them well. They were based on a full confidence in the lecture method, as it was employed in the German universities. As a young man Richards had been responsible for instruction in quantitative analysis. But by the time he was called to Gottingen he was ready to turn over concern with this phase of practical chemistry to junior pro- fessors whom he had trained. The arrangements which Rich- ards entered into in 1902 at the age of thirty-four remained unaltered until his death. Though he became famous because

258 BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS of his many papers describing his researches, his performance as an excellent and devoted teacher was in itself worthy of high praise. In 1896 Richards married Miriam Stuart Thayer, daughter of Joseph Henry Thayer, a professor at the Harvard Divinity School and outstanding New Testament scholar. Thanks to the generosity of his father, Richards was able to build a house not far from the Harvard College yard, in which the couple lived their entire married life. There were three children: Grace Thayer, who became the wife of the author of this memoir; William Theodore and Greenough Thayer, both of whom be- came professors, the one of chemistry at Princeton, the other of design at Virginia Polytechnic Institute. The summer months without fail were-dedicated to a vacation, often on Mt. Desert Island in Maine. The health of both father and mother was somewhat precarious but the duties of the professor of physical chemistry were carried out without fail year after year. Only for half a year in 1907 did Richards absent himself from Cam- bridge in order to function as the Exchange Professor at Berlin. There were no leaves of absence for reasons of health, and Richards never availed himself of the privilege of taking a half year's sabbatical at full salary. He could not bear to be separated in term time from his graduate students whose experimentations he followed almost daily with a discerning yet sympathetic eye. The habit of attempting to forsee all possible contingencies, which was basic to his success as a scientific investigator, placed a heavy strain on his life as a husband and father. To worry about the smallest detail was to be a painstaking chemist setting new standards of accurate measurement. Yet to carry over to daily life the same attitude condemned the scientist to a total life of anxiety. As he approached sixty it became apparent to his close relatives that the nervous load Richards had been carrying for years was too much for the physical organism. Yet he continued his lectures and went to his laboratory on his regular

THEODORE WILLIAM RICHARDS 259 schedule until within a few days of his death, which occurred on April 2, 1928. He went down with his colors flying as had been his wish. RICHARDS S SCIENTIFIC WORK f Richards left an account of his scientific work up to the year 1914. The first portion of the document deals with his investi- gations of atomic weights. I have printed it as part of an article on "Theodore William Richards and the Periodic Table" ((Science, Vol. 168, pp. 425-28, April 24, 1970~. For the sake of completeness I reproduce it here and it constitutes the balance of the text of this memoir. The entire autobiographical frag- ~nent is written in the third person. The part which has not yet been published starts with his evaluation of his work on chem- ical thermodynamics. I have to thank my wife for making the manuscript available.] The scientific work of Theodore Id. Richards may be divided for convenience into five categories more or less closely interrelated. The first of these categories includes the study of atomic weights, the second, the investigation of various prob- lems concerning chemical equilibrium, the third, original work upon chemical thermodynamics both practical and theoretical, the fourth, the study of various problems in electrochemistry, and the fifth both practical and theoretical work concerning the significance of atomic compressibility and the changes exhibited by atomic volumes under varying conditions. During the past twenty-six years Richards has been directly concerned in the study of the atomic weights of twenty elements, and some of his pupils at Harvard have independently studied ten more. Thus far no one has been able to show that any one of the investigations concerning these thirty elements is seri- ously in error, and the results of all have been accepted as the best heretofore published by the International Committee on

260 BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS Atomic Weights, which has no Harvard representative upon it. The elements investigated under the immediate direction of Richards or with his own hands are as follows: oxygen, copper, barium, strontium, zinc, magnesium, nickel, cobalt, iron, ura- nium, calcium, caesium, chlorine, bromine, silver, sodium, potassium, nitrogen, sulphur, and lithium. The determination of the ratio of oxygen to hydrogen was taken up in collaboration with I. P. Cooke in 1886. They weighed hydrogen directly in large glass globes, and after having burnt it with copper oxide, determined the weight of water. The outcome gave a result for hydrogen only 0.0004 different from the value 1.0078 now generally accepted. This was the first direct determination showing that the ratio of hydrogen to oxygen is distinctly less than 1 is to 16, and the error in the result was one-half as large as the error that was previously con- sidered as the best. The behavior of copper oxide led Richards to suspect that the atomic weight of copper accepted at that time was in error, and accordingly he commenced an investigation of this element which lasted four years. He discovered that oxides of metals prepared from the nitrate always contain included gases, a cir- cumstance which he found to vitiate the earlier work not only upon the atomic weight of copper but also those of a number of other elements. He showed also that the copper sulphate had much greater tendency to retain water than had been attributed to it, and by means of a number of new methods obtained a series of consistent results for the atomic weight of copper. The relation of copper to silver, of copper to bromine, and of copper to sulphuric acid were all determined with care, and all yielded essentially the same new value, thus leaving no doubt that the old value for copper was nearly one-half a percent too low. The anomalous behavior of barium sulphate led Richards then to study the atomic weight of barium; both barium chloride and barium bromide were analyzed taking care to drive off all

THEODORE WILLIAM RICHARDS 261 the water without decomposing the salts. Much time was spent upon the preparation of pure silver and every step of the analysis was tested taking great heed especially of the solubility of silver chloride. The result showed that barium was previously almost as unexact as copper. In this case as in the other not only were new results obtained but also the reasons for the deviations in the old ones were made clear. Strontium, magnesium, zinc, nickel, cobalt, iron, uranium, and caesium were then taken up in succession, being studied by somewhat similar methods with the help of the experience gained in the earlier researches. In some of these Richards had the assistance of pupils. He was able to show that the old results on zinc and magnesium were in error because of the retention of gases on the oxides, and that most of the other values also had been vitiated by chemical imperfections in the methods employed. Richards not only employed and revised the old methods but devised new ones in the course of this work. The investigation upon caesium marked the end of the first period of his investigations concerning atomic weights— the time during which the work of Stas had been considered impeccable. In 1904 the investigation of a large number of specimens of sodium bromide while verifying Stas's atomic weight for bromine seemed to indicate that this value for sodium was distinctly too high. Because the sodium bromide under- `rent transition from the dihydrate to the anhydrous salt at a perfectly definite point, it was evidently very pure. Hence its verdict could not be ignored and a new study of the atomic weight of sodium was undertaken. This investigation began a new period in Richards's work in which he was able to show the errors into which Stas had unwittingly fallen. He proved without question that not only was Stas's value for sodium too high but his value for chlorine was too low, and both of these conclusions have been verified by the subsequent work of others. Because Richards had previously chiefly used bromides, this

262 BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS discovery of the error in chlorine was not made during his earlier researches. The discovery of error in two of Stas's most accurately de- termined results led to the natural suspicion that others also might need revision. Accordingly three determinations of potassium, of sulphur, and of nitrogen were undertaken with the help of able assistants, the last of the three investigations being conducted partly at the University of Berlin during the term of his exchange professorship there. Potassium chloride and bromide were both analyzed with all the care used in the case of sodium. Sulphur was approached by a new method involving the conversion of silver sulphate into the chloride, and nitrogen was attacked both by the synthesis of silver nitrate and by the analysis of ammonium chloride. The work on silver nitrate was in some ways the most convincing of all, because in this case it was possible to prove that the salt was essentially free from water, by decomposing it and passing the products of decomposition, suitably treated, through a phosphorus pent- oxide tube. No more concordant results have ever been secured in the Harvard Laboratory than the six successive experiments by which the silver was converted into silver nitrate—the ex- treme variation between the results being less than one-thou- sandth of a percent. If any error existed in them, it was an error r or amazing constancy. The most recent finished problem with which he has been concerned was a study of the atomic weights of lithium, and silver. Not only was the ratio of lithium chloride to silver de- termined but also its ratio to silver chloride and besides this by a new method the amount of lithium chloride contained in lithium perchlorate was carefully determined. The ratio of silver to oxygen was thus directly obtained by this equation. AS LiC1 LiClO4 LiC1 Ag LiC1 O4

THEODORE WILLIAM RICHARDS 263 This was entirely a new procedure and for many reasons seems to give one of the very best means of determining the atomic weight of silver. Incidentally the atomic weight of lithium was found to be almost a whole percent less than that obtained by Stas. This seems to have been Stas's most grievous error, and came to pass only because all the defects in his process accumu- lated on the head of this lightest of all the metals. Richards has himself said that "the secret of success in the study of atomic weights lies in carefully choosing the particular substances and processes employed, and in checking every operation by parallel experiments so that every unknown chem- ical and physical error will gradually be ferreted out of its hiding place. The most important causes of inaccuracy are: the solubility of precipitates and of the material of containing vessels; the occlusion of foreign substances by solids, and espe- cially the presence of retained moisture in almost everything. Each of these disturbing circumstances varies with each individ- ual case. Far more depends upon the intelligent choice of the con- ditions of experiment than upon the mere mechanical execu- tion of the operations, although that too is important." In carrying out these suggestions he has brought into play all the powerful aid furnished by the new science of physical chemistry which has thrown so much light upon the mechanism of the establishment of chemical equilibrium. He has always heeded the advice given in the paragraph above, especially the series of errors caused by the unsuspected presence of water in the salts to be weighed. With this in mind there was evolved in the course of this work a remarkably simple device for driving off every trace of water from any salt, and then enclosing this salt in a bottle without exposure for an instant to the outside air so that it could be weighed without risk of attracting moisture. This device greatly helped his work as did also the nephelometer, an instrument for detecting minute traces of suspended pre- cipitate by means of the light reflected by them. Both of these

264 BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS instruments were original with him. He has always pointed out very emphatically that the chemical difficulties in work of this kind greatly exceed the physical ones. The operation of weighing is far more easily controlled than the solubility of precipitates and the retention of foreign substances in the ma- terial to be weighed. For this reason he has preferred to use rather small quantities of material and to prepare these in a state of undoubted purity. As he has pointed out, there is no object in weighing 100 grams of material even to within 5 milligrams, if it contains as much as 0.01 percent of impurity. A much better result can be obtained by weighing 10 grams to within 0.1 of a milligram, provided that the material itself contains no more than 0.001 percent of impurity. Richards's contributions to the science of chemical thermo- dynamics have been varied in nature, and, as in the other cases, they have had in part a practical interest and in part also pri- marily a theoretical one; his first published paper was a brief study of the constant heat of precipitations of argentic chloride, now so well explained by Arrhenius's theory. Subsequently he has studied a wide variety of thermochemical phenomena 'with unusual precision, having devised entirely a new method of calorimetry for this purpose. This method, first put in practice by him, consists in causing the environment of the calorimeter to change in temperature at precisely the same rate as the calo- rimeter itself. Thus at one stroke the various corrections for cooling, and for the lag of the thermometer, are wholly elimi- nated, and a more satisfactory thermochemical result is obtained than can be reached in any other way. With the help of pupils, he has applied this method to the determination of the specific heats of solids at low temperatures, the specific heats of liquids, the heats of solution of metals in acids, and the heats of com- bustion of organic substances, having obtained a great variety of data upon these various topics, many already published and

THEODORE WILLIAM RICHARDS 265 many awaiting publication. He has been able to show in most cases that others have made greater or less important errors in their work, for example, in the case of the determination of specific heats of solids when corrected for the heat loss or gain during transfer by running parallel experiments with a hollow vessel of the same bulk and same material as the sold piece of metal to be measured, thus making possible by mere subtraction the accurate correction for this error. He was also able to prove that Julius Thomsen's methods for correcting the results with concentrated solutions to those with dilute solutions was in- correct in detail. In his study of the specific heats of the elements at low temperatures he emphasized especially the rapid falling off of the specific heat with the temperature in many cases, a phe- nomenon recently taken up more in detail and at even lower temperatures by Walther Nernst. His study of heat capacities, however, was not limited to the practical laboratory work. In a paper, which deserves especial mention because it has been frequently overlooked, he pointed out on the basis of such data as were available at that time that the change of heat capacity of a reacting system was In all probability connected with the dif- ference between the total energy change and the free energy change in that reaction. He was the first to point out that in all probability the two latter quantities are equal to one another in case no change of heat capacity occurs during the reaction, and he also pointed out that in all probability an increase in heat capacity during a reaction signifies that the total energy change is less than the free energy change, whereas, on the other hand, a decrease in the heat capacity during the reaction probably causes the total energy change to be greater than the free energy change. These statements clearly made in 1902 are without question the basis of Nernst's subsequent mathematical treat- ment of the subject. Richards' data were rather inadequate and . .

266 BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS his paper tentative, but the essential ideas involved are unques- tionably outlined in this paper, although not treated there in full detail. Electrical problems were first attacked by Richards in his effort to discover if the electrochemical equivalents are precisely equal to the corresponding chemical equivalents, as the atomic theory would lead one to expect. He studied therefore in great de- tail the copper and the silver voltameter (or coulometer, as he more appropriately named the instrument). He was able to trace the error in the former due to the formation of cuprous sulphate, and a very elaborate study of the silver coulometer led him to discover the chief causes of error in the instrument as used up to that time, and then to propose several methods of obtaining ac- curate results. The difficulty of the work seems to be indicated by the discussion which has since been raised by the subsequent work of others in the light of the recent investigations conducted at the Bureau of Standards at Washington as well as by G. A. Hulett, but there can be no question that every point made in Richards's papers was correct. He was able to show in these researches not only that Fara- day's law of electrolysis holds with great exactness, but also that this exactness is fully equalled by the behavior of fused salts when subjected to electrolysis. He proved also that elec- trostenolytic effects are likewise without influence upon Fara- day's law. These investigations taken together constitute the most striking evidence as yet obtained of the accuracy of this fundamental generalization. They place it among the very few laws which seem to be as exact as far as our very careful obser- vation can show. His electrochemical work has also included the determina- tion of single potential differences as well as of the electromotive forces exhibited by dilute and concentrated liquid amalgams. The most interesting contribution to the former class of phe-

THEODORE WILLIAM RICHARDS 267 Amend is that concerning the electromotive force of iron under varying conditions and the effect of occluded hydrogen. In this research he not only for the first time discovered the true single potential difference exhibited by iron, but explained the reasons for the low results obtained by others and threw new light upon the nature of hydrogen occluded by iron and the mechanism of overvoltage. All his results on this subject have subsequently been confirmed by Forster in a monograph pub- lished by the Bunsen Gesellschaft. With regard to his work upon electromotive forces produced by dilute amalgams, it is enough to say that with the help of pupils he has studied amalgams of cadmium, zinc, thallium, indium, lead, tin, copper, and lithium, in many cases using very concentrated solutions of the metal in mercury, and these varied data were made the basis not only for a striking verification of the exactness of the law of concentration-effect at great dilution but also a basis for a thermodynamic analysis of the cases of the deviations exhibited by concentrated solutions. The work upon the significance of changing atomic volume and atomic compressibility which has occupied much of Pro- fessor Richards's time during the last thirteen years has both a practical and a theoretical aspect. His views concerning the nature of the liquid and solid state have led him to make a large number of determinations of compressibility, of surface tension, and heat of evaporation, which have enriched consid- erably our knowledge upon this subject, and which cannot but be of lasting value, even independent of any hypothesis. Prom- inent among these data are the determinations of the compressi- bilities of the elements. In a series of investigations using an entirely new method, devised by himself, for determining compressibility, he determined the relative compressibilities of thirty-five liquid or solid elements, so distributed as to depict for the first time clearly the periodic nature of this property.

268 BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS The close correspondence between compressibilities of the solid elements and their atomic volumes is shown by the two curves in the accompanying diagram, cut from one of his publications. In addition to these data concerning the elements he has, with the help as before of a number of pupils, determined the compressibilities of a variety of simple compounds, such as the halides of lithium, sodium, potassium, and thallium, on the one hand, and hydrocarbons, alcohols, esters, amines, and organic halides, on the other hand. These data, many of them entirely new, afford a basis for a variety of interesting, theoretical con- clusions concerning the mechanism of the compression of solids and liquids. His work on surface tension and heat of evapora- tion, which was undertaken in order to test his hypothesis con- cerning the relation of these properties, has never yet been fully published, and therefore cannot be fully discussed at present, but enough has appeared in print to show the im- portance of the work. As has been stated, all these investigations were suggested or inspired by Richards's theory of atomic compressibility which differs radically from the current kinetic conception of the structure of solid and liquid bodies. His hypothesis first arose in his mind from the consideration of the behavior of gases, and the now generally accepted variability of the quantity b in the equation of van der Waals. He reasoned that if b is changeable, the actual size of the molecules to which b is probably nearly related must also be changeable. This implies molecular com- pressibility, and if molecules are compressible, they must be much compressed by the great forces of cohesion and chemical affinity which exist in solid and liquid substances. Accordingly he immediately sought for evidence of the compressing effect of chemical affinity and cohesion, and promptly found it in the rediscovery of the general but not invariable rule;—greater af- finity usually causes greater contraction on combination. This ~ This diagram is not reproduced here.

THEODORE WILLIAM RICHARDS 269 idea has been suggested by Davy one hundred years ago, and several others since have revived it; but the idea nevertheless made no impression upon chemical literature as a whole, and was entirely overlooked by Richards until after the publication of his first papers. It must be said, however, that the oversight leas perhaps more fortunate than not, because the entirely new approach to the subject led Richards to penetrate much more fundamentally into it than those who had preceded him. He has been able to show without much room for doubt that the reasons for the occasional deviations from the general rule, de- viations which probably destroyed earlier confidence in the whole matter, are almost certainly due to the concomitant action of both chemical affinity and cohesion; in other words he by approximate quantitative evidence was able to show that not only the combination of atoms to make molecules causes com- pression, as the affinity is greater, but also that the molecules in cohering to one another in order to form a liquid or a solid compress one another in this process also. Hence the total vol- ume of a liquid or solid appears according to his hypothesis to be the result of these varying and very different affinity-pres- sures. He has been able to show that in a great many cases this hypothesis which has led him to consider atoms and molecules as closely packed without spaces between them in liquids and solids is consistent with a great variety of widely different phenomena both physical and chemical. For example, it gives entirely a new insight into the tenacity, ductility, hardness, brittleness, and surface tension; it gives a new and easily con- ceivable interpretation of the critical point; the peculiar rela- tions of material and light, such as magnetic rotation, fluores- cence, partial absorption, etc., may be referred to the modified vibrations of compressed atoms. He has pointed out also that the theory gives a very plausible explanation to the reason why as a rule among isomers the denser isomer is less volatile, less

270 BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS compressible, and possesses a greater surface tension than the less dense isomer. A clear kinetic picture of the asymmetric carbon and in general the mechanism of the actual chemical affinities of any two atoms may be based upon this hypothesis. As he has said in the Faraday Lecture: "The satisfying of each valence of an atom would cause a depression on the atomic surface, owing to the pressure exerted by the affinity in that spot. The stronger the affinity, the greater should be this distortion. Evidently this conception gives a new picture of the asymmetric carbon atom, which combined with four other different atoms, would have upon its surface depressions of four unequal magnitudes, and be twisted into an unsymmetrical tetrahedron. The combining atoms would be held on the faces of the tetrahedron thus formed, instead of impossibly perching upon the several peaks. According to this hypothesis, the carbon atom need not be imagined as a tetrahedron in the first place; it would assume the tetrahedral shape when combined with the other four atoms. One can easily image that the development of each new valence would change the affinities previously exercised, somewhat as a second depression in the side of a rubber ball will modify a forcibly caused dimple in some other part. Thus a part of the effect which each new atom has on the affinities of the other atoms already present may be explained." He has published a number of papers upon the subject of atomic compressibility; the whole matter is summed up briefly in his Faraday Lecture of 1911. During the twelve years since his first publication upon the subject, no one seems to have been able to advance a first-rate argument against this theory of compressible atoms, and if it continues to gain ground, as it has during this period, one may safely predict that before long it is bound to cause nothing short of a revolution in the kinetic point of view concerning the nature of equilibrium and change in solid and liquid substances as well as a better understanding of the deviations of gases from the exact gas law.

THEODORE WILLIAM RICHARDS 271 BIBLIOGRAPHY Note: As was customary in the last century, Richards usually published the results of his researches in both English and German scientific journals. To list all of Richards's papers would be to expand this bibliography un- necessarily. Therefore only one explicit reference is listed below for the report of an investigation. KEY TO ABBREVIATIONS Am. Chem. J. American Chemical journal Am. i. Sci. American Surreal of Science Ber. Berichte der Deutschen chemischen Gesellschaft (later, Chemische Berichte) Carnegie Inst. Wash. Publ. Carnegie Institution of Washington Publica- tion Carnegie Inst. Wash. Year Book Carnegie Institution of Washington Year Book Chem. News Chemical News and Journal of Physical Science (later, Chem- ical Products and the Chemical News) Chem. Rev. _ Chemical Reviews J. Am. Chem. Soc. _ journal of the American Chemical Society J. Franklin Inst. journal of the Franklin Institute J. Phys. Chem. _ Journal of Physical Chemistry Orig. Com. 8th Internat. Congr. Appl. Chem. - Original Communications of the 8th International Congress of Applied Chemistry Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci. Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (later, Daedalus) Proc. Nat. .\cad. Sci. - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Z. anorg. Chem. Zeitschrift fur anorganische Chemie (later, Zeitschrift fur anorganische und allgemeine Chemie) Z. physik. Chem. Zeitschrift fur physikalische Chemie, Stochiometrie und Verwandtschaftslehre (later, Zeitschrift fur physikalische Chemie) 1888 On the constancy in the heat produced by the reaction of argentic nitrate on solutions of metallic chlorides. Chem. News, 57:16- 17. With Josiah Parsons Cooke. The relative values of the atomic weights of hydrogen and oxygen. Am. Chem. J., 10:81-110. A determination of the relation of the atomic weights of copper and silver. Am. Chem. J., 10:182-87. Further investigation on the atomic weight of copper. Am. Chem. J., 10:187-91. 1889 A method of vapour density determination. Chem. News, 59:87-88.

272 BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS With P. iannasch. The determination of sulphuric acid in presence of iron. Chem. News, 60:19-20. 1890 Ueber cupriammoniumbromide. Ber., 23: 3790-91. 1891 The analysis of cupric bromide and the atomic weight of copper. Chem. News, 63:20-23, 34-36, 43~4. 1892 A revision of the atomic weight of copper. Chem. News, 65:236-37, 244~5, 260-61, 265-68, 281-82, 293, 302-3. A revision of the atomic weight of copper. Chem. News, 66:7, 20-21, 29-31, 47-48, 57-58, 74, 82-83. 1893 With Elliot Folger Rogers. On the occlusion of gases by the oxides of metals. Am. Chem. i., 15: 567-78. With Hubert Grover Shawl Cupriammonium double salts. Am. Chem. i., 15: 642-53. A revision of the atomic weight of barium. First paper. The analysis of baric bromide. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 28:1-30; Z. anorg. Chem., 3:441-71. A revision of the atomic weight of barium. Second paper. The analysis of baric chloride. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 29:55-91; Z. anorg. Chem., 6: 89-127, 1894. 1894 A revision of the atomic weight of strontium. First paper. The analysis of strontic bromide. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 30:369- 89; Z. anorg. Chem., 8: 253-73, 1895. With H. George Parker. On the occlusion of baric chloride by baric sulphate. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 31:67-77; Z. anorg. Chem., 8:413-23, 1895. 1895 With Andrew Henderson Whitridge. On the cupriammonium double salts. Am. Chem. i., 17:145-54. With George Oenslager. On the cupriammonium double salts. Am. Chem. J., 17: 297-305.

THEODORE WILLIAM RICHARDS 273 With Elliot Folger Rogers. A revision of the atomic weight of zinc. First paper. The analysis of zincic bromide. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 31: 158-80; Z. anorg. Chem., 10: 1-24. 1896 With H. George Parker. A revision of the atomic weight of mag- nesium. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 32:55-73; Z. anorg. Chem., 13:81-100. 1897 With John Trowbridge. The spectra of argon. 15-20. With John Trowbridge. The multiple spectra of gases. Am. J. Sci., 4S.3:117-20. With John Trowbridge. The effect of great current strength on the conductivity of electrolytes. Philosophical Magazine, 43:376-78. On the temperature coefficient of the potential of the calomel electrode, with several different supernatant electrolytes. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 33:3-20; Z. physik. Chem., 24:39-54. Note on the rate of dehydration of crystallized salts. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 33:2 1-27; Z. anorg. Chem., 1 7: 1 65-6D, 1 898. With Allerton Seward Cushman. A revision of the atomic weight of nickel. First paper. The analysis of nickelous bromide. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 33:97-111; Z. anorg. Chem., 16:167-83, 1898. With Gregory Paul Baxter. A revision of the atomic weight of cobalt. First paper. The analysis of cobaltous bromide. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 33: 115-28; Z. anorak. Chem.. 16: 362-76. 1898. Am. l. Sci., 4S.3: Judith Benjamin Shores Meri~old. On the cuprosammonium bro- mides and the cupriammonium sulphocyanates. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 33:131-38; Z. anorg. Chem., 17:245-52, 1898. 1898 The relation of the taste of acids to their degree of dissociation. Am. Chem. J., 20:121-26. A convenient gas generator, and device for dissolving solids. Am. Chem. J., 20: 189-95. A table of atomic weights. Am. Chem. l., 20:543-54. On the cause of the retention and release of eases occluded bY the oxides of metals. With I. B. Churchill. cam Am. Chem. J., 20:701-32. The transition temperature of sodic sulphate,

274 BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS a new fixed point in thermometry. 39; Z. physik. Chem., 26:691-98. With Wentworth Lewis Harrington. Boiling point of mixed solu- tions. I. Z. physik. Chem., 27:421-25. With Gilbert Newton Lewis. Some electrochemical and thermo- chemical relations of zinc and cadmium amalgams. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 34: 87-99; Z. physik Chem., 28: 1-12, 1899. 1899 With Henry Burnell Faber. Chem. News, 78:229, 238- On the solubility of argentic bromide and chloride in solutions of sodic thiosulphate. Am. Chem. l., 21: 167-72. Note on the spectra of hydrogen. Am. Chem. I., 21:172-74. With Allerton Seward Cushman. A revision of the atomic weight of nickel. Second paper. The determination of the nickel in nickelous bromide. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 34: 327~8; Z. anorg. Chem., 20:352-76. With Gregory Paul Baxter. A revision of the atomic weight of cobalt. Second paper. The determination of the cobalt in co- baltous bromide. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 34:351-69; Z. anorg. Chem., 21: 250-72. With Edward Collins and George W. Heimrod. The electrochem- ical equivalents of copper and silver. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 35: 123-50; Z. physik. Chem., 32:321-47, 1900. 1900 Note on a method of standardizing weights. l. Am. Chem. Soc., 22: 144-49. The driving tendency of physico-chemical reaction, and its tempera- ture coefficient. J. Phys. Chem., 4:383-93. With Gregory Paul Baxter. A revision of the atomic weight of iron. Preliminary paper. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 35:253-60; Z. anorg. Chem., 23:245-54. On the determination of sulphuric acid in the presence of iron; a note upon solid solutions. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 35:377-83 Z. anorg. Chem., 23: 383-90. 1901 With E. H. Archibald. photomicrography. A study of growing crystals by instantaneous Am. Chem. J., 26:61-74.

THEODORE WILLIAM RICHARDS 275 With Frank Roy Fraprie. The solubility of manganous sulphate. Am. Chem. I., 26:75-80. With Charles F. NIcCaffrey and Harold Bisbee. The occlusion of magnesic oxalate by calcic oxalate, and the solubility of calcic oxalate. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 36:377-93; Z. anorg. Chem., 28:71-89. The possible significance of changing atomic volume. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 37:3-17; Z. physik. Chem., 40:169-84, 1902. 1902 Edith Sidney Kent Singer. chloric and hydrocyanic acids. Am. Chem. I., 27:205-9. zenith B. Shores \lerigold. A new investigation concerning the atomic weight of uranium. Chem. News, 85: 177-78, 186-88, 201, 207-9, 222-24, 229-30, 249. A redetermination of the atomic weight of calcium. Preliminary paper. i. Am. Chem. Soc., 24:374-77. \Vith Ebenezer Henry Archibald. The decomposition of mercurous chloride by dissolved chlorides: a contribution to the study of concentrated solutions. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 37: 347-61; Z. physik. Chem., 40: 385-98. The significance of changing atomic volume. II. The probable source of the heat of chemical combination, and a new atomic hypothesis. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 37: 399~ 11; Z. physik. Chem., 40:597-610. With George William Heimrod. On the accuracy of the improved voltameter. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 37:415-43; Z. physik. Chem., 41:302-30. The significance of changing atomic volume. III. The relation of changing heat capacity to change of free energy, heat of reaction, change of volume, and chemical affinity. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 38: 293-3 1 7; Z. physik. Chem., 42: 1 29-54. The quantitative separation of hydro- \Alith Wilfred Newsome atolls l he speed and nature of the re- action of bromine upon oxalic acid. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci. 38: 321 -37; Z. physik. Chem., 41: 544-59. \\lith Wilfred Newsome Stull. The universally exact application of Faraday's Law. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 38:409-13; Z. physik. Chem., 42:621-2b, 1903. With Kenneth Lamartine Mark. An apparatus for the measure- ment of the expansion of gases by heat under constant pressure.

276 BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 38:417-28; Z. physik. Chem., 43:475- 86, 1903. 1903 Note concerning the calculation of thermochemical results. J. Am. Chem. Soc., 25:209-14. The freezing-points of dilute solutions. J. Am. Chem. Soc., 25:291- 98. With Ebenezer Henry Archibald. A revision of the atomic weight of caesium. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 38: 443-70; Z. anorg. Chem., 34:353-82. With Frederic Bonnet, Jr. The changeable hydrolytic equilibrium of dissolved chromic sulphate. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 39:3- 30; Z. physik. Chem., 47: 29-51, 1904. The inclusion and occlusion of solvent in crystals. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 42: 28-36; Z. physik. Chem., 46: 189-96. 1904 With Sidney Kent Singer. Note on a method of determining small quantities of mercury. I. Am. Chem. Soc., 26:300-2. With Wilfred Newsome Stull. New method of determining com- pressibility, with application to bromine, iodine, chloroform, bromoform. carbon tetrachloride, phosphorus, water ~nr1 ~ln.~.c ~~ ~ ~ ~ . i. Am. Chem. Soc., 26: 399-412. The significance of changing atomic volume. IV. The effects of chemical and cohesive internal pressure. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 39:581-604; Z. physik. Chem., 49:15-40. With Harold Bisbee. A rapid and convenient method for the quan- titative electrolytic precipitation of copper. I. Am. Chem. Soc., 26:530-36. 1905 Note on the efficiency of centrifugal purification. J. Am. Chem. Soc., 27:104-11. With Burritt S. Lacy. Electrostenolysis and Faraday's Law. T. Am. Chem. Soc., 27:232-33. With Roger Clark Wells. A revision of the atomic weights of sodium and chlorine. J. Am. Chem. Soc., 27:459-529. A revision of the atomic weight of strontium. Second paper. The

THEODORE WILLIAM RICHARDS 277 analysis of strontic chloride. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 40:603- 7; Z. anorg. Chem., 47:145-50. 1906 \\Jith George Shannon Forbes. Energy changes involved in the dilution of zinc and cadmium amalgams. Carnegie Inst. Wash. Publ., 56, iii + 68 pp. With Roger C. \\lells. The transition temperature of sodic bro- mide: a new fixed point in thermometry. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 41:435-48; Z. physik. Chem., 56:348-61. With Frederick G. Jackson. A new method of standardizing ther- mometers below 0° C. physik. Chem., 56:362-65. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 41:451-54; Z. 1907 Neuere Untersuchungen uber die Atomgewichte. Ber., 40:2767-79. With Arthur Staehler, G. Shannon Forbes, Edward Mueller, and Grinnell tones. Further researches concerning the atomic weights of potassium, silver, chlorine, bromine, nitrogen, and sulphur. Carnegie Inst. Wash. Publ., 69: 7-88. \\lith \11. N. Stull, F. N. Brink, and F. Bonnet, in The compres- sibilities of the elements and their periodic relations. Carnegie Inst. Wash. Publ., 76:7-67. Investigations concerning the values of the atomic weights and other physico-chemical constants. Carnegie Inst. Wash. Year Book, 6:193. Bemerkungen zum Gebrauch van Zentrifugen. Chemiker Zeitung, 31:1251. \\lith F. N. Brink. Densities of lithium, sodium, potassium, rubid- ium, and caesium. T. Am. Chem. Soc., 29:117-27. With Lawrence I. Henderson and Harry L. Frevert. Concerning the adiabatic determination of the heats of combustion of organic substances, especially sugar and benzol. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 42:573-93; Z. physik. Chem., 59:532-52. With F. Wrede. The transition temperature of manganous chlo- ride: a new fixed point in thermometry. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci., 43:343-50. 1908 Investigation of the values of atomic weights and other fundamental

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Biographic Memoirs: Volume 44 contains the biographies of deceased members of the National Academy of Sciences and bibliographies of their published works. Each biographical essay was written by a member of the Academy familiar with the professional career of the deceased. For historical and bibliographical purposes, these volumes are worth returning to time and again.

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